Guest guest Posted August 24, 2010 Report Share Posted August 24, 2010 Hello All- You know how sometimes you wish you could swoop back in time and save your little self from your BPD family members? Weirdly, I'm having a similar experience with a child. Recently, my husband and I were lucky enough to have a wonderful foster child join us. She's 13 years old, smart, kind, sensitive and loving. She seems eager to bond with us and she's an absolute joy to have around. We would love to adopt her if we get the chance, and she already started calling us her " parents " and saying she wants to live with us " for years and years " . I'll call her . It turns out 's mom and older sis are BPD, and her middle sister in is denial. Her mom is really low-functioning, and their life at home was pretty awful. Yup, I'm suddenly the parent of someone with a BPD parent (not us, you understand, but her mom). It's deja vu all over again! I was way luckier than , since my mom (in denial) and my dad (BPD) and brother (BPD) were all pretty high functioning. But in a lot of ways her life and experiences and feelings and family players are eerily similar to my own. Which could be really helpful to her, but is also sort of dangerous! I want to help and love this kid without: 1) over-identifying with her (since her life is her life, we are two separate people, boundaries are SO important, BPD parents have no boundaries, she needs breathing room for God's sake, etc). 2) telling her too much about my own experiences, or even anything at all about them. I don't want her to feel like she has to sympathize with me, esp. as she spent her childhood taken care of one adult, and hardly needs another to worry about. She already has too much of a tendency to try to take care of me and my husband. We keep trying to drive home the fact that WE are the adults and WE take care of her, and she can put down the grocery bags and the laundry basket and the cooking spoon and let us do it! Laying a big emotional trip on her about MY messed childhood would surely subvert that message. 3) pointing her to resources like this website - it's waaayyy to early for that. She doesn't even realize yet her mom's been diagnosed with a mental illness, (schizophrenia, though her social worker is trying to get it changed to BPD). Any advice anyone can offer? Parents, how do you help your kids deal with YOUR parent's BPD? How do you not overwhelm them with your own memories? How do you keep those boundaries clear, even when their reactions are so painfully familiar to you? Wait, actually, I guess most of you would be NC or LC with the grandparents, but my husband and I don't get to control that. controls how much contact she has with her BPD mom. Right now she has none, and wishes for none, so it's fairly easy to support that decision! But we also have to stay neutral and even encouraging when she does decide to re-connect with her mom. Complicating all this is the fact she may end up going back to this mother, either by her own choice (which seems unlikely at this point) or due to a court decision. We've got to push aside our own desire to form a family with her and support whatever she decides to do. Right now wants to be NC, but her mom is pushing hard for a visit, and keeps nagging the social worker. Her mom isn't allowed to call, but she pressured the middle sister to call , and tell her she was being " selfish " and " a bad daughter " . , God bless her, stuck to her guns and ended the call. I came into the room to find her in tears, asking me, " Am I being selfish? " I responded " Well, your mom and sister are trying to force you to do something that makes you feel unhappy and unsafe. Is that selfish? " So much for neutrality! I went on to say that she had a right to be happy and safe, she had a right to protect herself, and the only person who gets to decide when she sees her mom is herself. I told her that she shouldn't worry about hurting our feelings if she wants to see her mom. That she shouldn't worry about hurting her mom's feelings, if she doesn't. That she should listen to her own heart. I tried my best to keep my voice level and neutral. Then I went out for a long drive in the rain to cuss her mom out in the car! So clearly, this is getting to me. How can I use my knowledge of all this to help, not overwhelm and and overly influence, dear little confused ? Letty P.S. My husband and I signed us all up for therapy already. was so happy to finally get to talk about all this stuff that she grabbed our hands and SKIPPED to the appointment. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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